Hazel Elf, Sandgoblins & the Deva of the Moray Firth (2002)
Well, you can say you believe in fairies and elves but to draw an elf that everyone in the house knew of but I had never seen was quite something.
Well, you can say you believe in fairies and elves but to draw an elf that everyone in the house knew of but I had never seen was quite something.
This account was previously published in Visions Unseen, Frances shares her stories of how she visited and eventually joined the community in the early 1970s.
This Topic explores The Original Garden at Park Ecovillage Findhorn which is famous for being ‘where it all began’ and the place where the Community’s founders first connected with and worked with the subtle realms, devas, and nature spirits in ‘co-creation with nature’.
This account was previously published in Visions Unseen, Frances shares her stories of how she visited and eventually joined the community in the early 1970s.
A vital aspect of Community life, in both senses of the word, is the role of work as a form of spiritual practice.
"How do we live our ordinary, everyday life in relation to what we think the planet is asking of us all?" This, to me, is the very essence of the ecovillage story.
For human beings it is through the emotions and a pure heart that the Elementals may be contacted and worked with...
This article from a research paper written by Al McLeod from California State University Fresno, California during his visit in 1977 to the Findhorn Foundation Community discusses three bases of authority, traditional, rational and charismatic and concludes that the Community's mode of operation and authority requires a fourth model which the author calls 'personal-present authority'.
This article is from a research paper written by Al McLeod from California State University Fresno, California during his visit in 1977 to the Findhorn Foundation Community. It examines the decision making process in the Community and the use of feedback in that process. It concludes that the more difficult the decision the closer members are brought together.
This article is from a research paper written by Al McLeod from California State University Fresno, California during his visit in 1977 to the Findhorn Foundation Community. It discusses the concept of feedback and how this is fundamental in understanding the workings of interpersonal relations in the Community.